1. A Cross-Cultural Investigation of Relational and Social Aggression in Female College Students from Puerto Rico and the United States.
- Author
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Clinton, Amanda, Crothers, Laura M., Kolbert, Jered B., Hughes, Tammy L., Schreiber, James B., Schmitt, Ara J., Lipinski, John, Rodríquez Vázquez, Greachmarie, Bell, G. Ronald, and Field, Julaine E.
- Subjects
AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,COLLEGE students ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL skills ,T-test (Statistics) ,CULTURAL values ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Researchers compared scores on a self-report measure of relational and social aggression using 2 groups, European American female university students (M =20.23 years,SD =3.88) from the mid-Atlantic region of the United States and Hispanic females from Puerto Rico (M =19.34 years,SD =1.26). Results indicate that cultural differences were evident in the use of relational and social aggression. The exclusively Hispanic Puerto Rican sample reported being more socially aggressive than the European American, mid-Atlantic sample. In contrast, the European American sample identified as being more relationally aggressive in their relationships than the Hispanic Puerto Rican sample. This distinction allows us to consider potential cultural differences in interpersonal relations in college-age females. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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